Blaise Pascal (1623–1662) French mathematician, physicist, inventor, writer, and Christian philosopher
Discourses on the Condition of the Great
Book 1, Ch. 56; as translated in The Histories (1998) by Robin Waterfield and Carolyn Dewald http://books.google.com/books?id=Or5CKl1ObX4C&pg=PA24 pp. 23-24 ISBN 0192824252, 9780192824257 <br class="br">The Histories
Blaise Pascal (1623–1662) French mathematician, physicist, inventor, writer, and Christian philosopher
Discourses on the Condition of the Great
Blaise Pascal (1623–1662) French mathematician, physicist, inventor, writer, and Christian philosopher
But is there less in the people of rank who live in so strange a forgetfulness of their natural condition?
Discourses on the Condition of the Great
Bernard Groethuysen (1880–1946) French literary historian, translator and writer
Source: The Bourgeois: Catholicism vs. Capitalism in Eighteenth-Century France (1927), p. 25
Harry V. Jaffa (1918–2015) American historian and collegiate professor
2000s, The Real Abraham Lincoln: A Debate (2002), The Right of Secession Is Not the Right of Revolution
David Dixon Porter (1813–1891) United States Navy admiral
Source: 1880s, Incidents and Anecdotes of the Civil War (1885), pp. 282–283
Will Durant book The Story of Civilization
Source: The Story of Civilization (1935–1975), I - Our Oriental Heritage (1935), Ch. III : The Political Elements of Civilization, p. 21
Context: If the average man had had his way there would probably never have been any state. Even today he resents it, classes death with taxes, and yearns for that government which governs least. If he asks for many laws it is only because he is sure that his neighbor needs them; privately he is an unphilosophical anarchist, and thinks laws in his own case superfluous. In the simplest societies there is hardly any government. Primitive hunters tend to accept regulation only when they join the hunting pack and prepare for action. The Bushmen usually live in solitary families; the Pygmies of Africa and the simplest natives of Australia admit only temporarily of political organization, and then scatter away to their family groups; the Tasmanians had no chiefs, no laws, no regular government; the Veddahs of Ceylon formed small circles according to family relationship, but had no government; the Kubus of Sumatra "live without men in authority" every family governing itself; the Fuegians are seldom more than twelve together; the Tungus associate sparingly in groups of ten tents or so; the Australian "horde" is seldom larger than sixty souls. In such cases association and cooperation are for special purposes, like hunting; they do not rise to any permanent political order.
Washington Irving (1783–1859) writer, historian and diplomat from the United States
Mahomet and his successors, George P. Putnam, 1850, p. 339.
Mahomet and his successors (1849)
Friedrich Schiller book On the Aesthetic Education of Man
Letter 3
On the Aesthetic Education of Man (1794)
Bernard Groethuysen (1880–1946) French literary historian, translator and writer
Source: The Bourgeois: Catholicism vs. Capitalism in Eighteenth-Century France (1927), p. 89